Abstract
This Article addresses two related issues in the federal habeas of state convictions. First, it analyzes a circuit split that recently emerged over whether a state’s appeal would be moot after a federal district court grants habeas and a state vacates its own judgment. One view is that the state vacatur would render the appeal moot because the prisoner is no longer in custody. A second view is that the appeal would not necessarily be moot because a partial remedy could be available. Second, this Article identifies some courts conflating the language of a state’s vacatur in habeas and evaluates the implications of such for mootness.
These recent views in federal appellate courts have potentially produced an overly expansive reading of when a partial remedy should be available. Under recent United States Supreme Court discourse regarding whether habeas should only cure jurisdictional defects, courts should have an even less expansive reading than any of the circuits currently employ because federal habeas would be determining that a state’s conviction is void ab initio. This Article is the first to examine the partial remedy doctrine in habeas and the circuit split identified.
Recommended Citation
Jeffrey Greenbaum,
To Vacate or Not to Vacate: Partial Remedies and Mootness in Federal Habeas of State Convictions,
94 U. Cin. L. Rev.
699
(2026)
Available at: https://scholarship.law.uc.edu/uclr/vol94/iss3/3
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